Sebastian
Tragi-comic play by Stephen Goldrick
A tragi-comic play by local playwright Stephen Goldrick about a mute teenager, her imaginary mime friend, and her father in 1970s Sydney.
Josie is a young teenager who can’t talk. She is fascinated by her vision of French history, supported by her imaginary friend, Sebastian, a mime clown. Her father, Dave, works on the inner-Sydney garbage truck shift, during which he and his friend, Vic, rehearse for the ‘People’s Messiah’. Dave idolises his late wife, a second-rate club singer, and organises recitatives to entertain the angels looking after her. Meanwhile, childcare worker Margaret Velasquez believes Sebastian is the impediment to Josie's vocal recovery, doctors having successfully operated on Josie's larynx a year before. She tries to make Josie ‘grow up’. Dr. Groth, a French psychologist, believes Josie is afraid to talk because of her father’s expectations. A new play from local Illawarra playwright Stephen Goldrick, Sebastian is a tragi-comic fable based in Sydney in the 1970’s, where garbologists sing Handel and where a daughter’s silent imagination challenges the guillotine.
Listed on workshop-theatre · updated 3 July